<p>&nbsp; &nbsp;&ldquo;&hellip;This dramatist&rsquo;s implicit thesis is that if you listen closely enough there&rsquo;s significant artistry in insignificant talk.<br />&nbsp; &nbsp;As in her earlier plays VISION DISTURBANCE and ADULT Ms Masciotti mines the banalaties of everyday chatter for heroic poetry. Set largely in working-class Pennsylvania in towns forgotten by time her uneventful dramas seem to be composed of what might be called `found conversation&rsquo; of words taken directly from life with only minor cosmetic alteration.<br />&nbsp; &nbsp;This may sound like your idea of hell. But there&rsquo;s a determined empathy in Ms Masciotti&rsquo;s work that enlivens the senses making you realize that nothing and no one is boring&mdash;once you&rsquo;re forced to pay close attention.<br />&nbsp; &nbsp;&hellip;SOCIAL SECURITY is both more conventional and experimental than Ms Masciotti&rsquo;s previous work. Its plot&mdash;and it has more of one than this writer usually provides&mdash;vaguely recalls a multitude of stories in which a vulnerable old woman is fleeced by a younger predator.<br />&nbsp; &nbsp;The wolf in this case is June&rsquo;s landlord Wayne a disgraced and self-medicating former podiatrist who makes nice with his tenant while skimming from her Social Security payments. Another neighbor the kindly Sissy a Greek-born masseuse tries to keep a lookout for threats to June&rsquo;s well-being.<br />&nbsp; &nbsp;What suspense the story has comes from their half-formed battle of wills over an old woman&rsquo;s destiny. June doesn&rsquo;t seem to make moral distinctions between them. As far as she&rsquo;s concerned each is a set of ears of equal value receptacles for her contentedly oblivious monologues&hellip;<br />&nbsp; &nbsp;&hellip;I remain absorbed by Ms Masciotti&rsquo;s logorrheic characters especially June&hellip;<br />&nbsp; &nbsp;June is not unlike that eternal chatterbox Winnie buried up to her neck in sand in Samuel Beckett&rsquo;s HAPPY DAYS a person for whom there&rsquo;s life as long there&rsquo;s talk. June is in her less symbolic way as immobilized as Winnie is. And as her tongue keeps flapping she too becomes an existential heroine of sorts a life force that persists even as it shrinks into nothingness.&rdquo;<br />Ben Brantley The New York Times</p>
Piracy-free
Assured Quality
Secure Transactions
Delivery Options
Please enter pincode to check delivery time.
*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.